Poppies in the fields of Flanders, where some of the heaviest losses of World War One occurred.
(photo Tijl Vercaemer)
Elisabeth Therese Marie Helene of Belgium became heir to her country's throne when her father, Philippe, took the throne in 2013. Elisabeth's name is among the most traditional in European royalty with consorts and regnants right across the continent wearing it through the centuries. It's also a name found in all three languages of the country she will one day rule - Flemish, French and German. But the modern princess was given the name in honour of her great, great, grandmother who began life as Elisabeth of Bavaria and went on to rule as Queen Consort of the Belgians from 1909 to 1934.
Elisabeth of Bavaria, Queen Consort of the Belgians and wife of Albert I. Her great, great granddaughter, Elisabeth, becomes heir to the throne on July 21st 2013.
Queen Elisabeth of the Belgians was the son of a royal trailblazer, Karl-Theodor, who was a trained doctor and who ran a clinic assisted by his wife, Maria Josepha of Portugal who worked with him as a nurse. And nursing was one of the ways that Elisabeth made her mark on the hearts of her people and the history of her country. Five years after she became Queen Consort, Belgium was dragged into World War One - her husband, Albert I, refused to let the German army march through his country to attack France and found his own nation invaded. Elisabeth became a nurse, working on the frontline and opening a clinic. She also founded an orphanage for children affected by the war.
King Albert I of the Belgians and Queen Consort Elisabeth on the day of their engagement
Elisabeth was a widow and Queen Mother by the time World War Two started but during that conflict she was involved in work to rescue Jewish children from deportation by the Nazis. As a war heroine in both world conflicts, she remains beloved in Belgium and a role model for the 21st century.
And the inspiration of a great charity worker also seems to have inspired the Crown Princess of Sweden and her husband when they chose a name for their first child. Their selection of Estelle was a surprise when it was announced by the present King of Sweden, Carl XVI Gustaf, the day after the birth. But it's widely thought that the couple used the inspiration of the American born wife of a royal cousin to name this future Queen of Sweden.
Princess Estelle of Sweden with her mother, Crown Princess Victoria on their way to auntie Madeleine's wedding in June 2013
(photo Frankie Foughnthin)
Estelle Bernadotte was born in New York in 1904 and married the nephew of Swedish King Gustaf V in 1928. During the war, her husband Folke Bernadotte was involved in the negotiations for the release of tens of thousands of Jewish prisoners being held by the Nazis and when the conflict ended he was appointed UN Security Council mediator in the Arab-Israeli conflict. In 1948 he was assassinated by the Jewish group Lehi. His wife took up the mantle of his charity work.
Estelle Romaine Manville in 1928 before her marriage to Folke Bernadotte
Estelle Bernadotte became president of the Swedish Girls Guide and Scout Association and led a charity for children with cerebral palsy named after her husband after its foundation on the 10th anniversary of his death. She was also involved with major international charities including the Red Cross and UNICEF.
Inspirational people have been used to name babies by English Queen Consorts but in medieval times that meant using a saint's name. The eldest son of Eleanor of Provence and Henry III is likely to have been named after England's saint, Edward the Confessor and Queen Consort Elizabeth Woodville is thought to have named her youngest child after St Bridget of Sweden.
The fact that two future monarchs have named future queens after modern heroines is an interesting trend.
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